Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 4, 1942)
FAGSF0U2 Tlw OUTGO!! STATESMAN. Satan. Oregon, Soturdor Morning, Aprd I, 1812 THE STATESBIAN PUBLISHING ; CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, President Member of The Anodated Press The Associated Press Is exclusively eotlfled to the use far Serious Cycling It' amazing, wlut dignified and important people you will see riding bicycles these days. And the bundles they carry bundles which ordinarily would be out of sight in the beck seat of the car. There's no privacy about a bi cycle; no way of concealing even the fact that you carry your lunch, not feeling up to the round trip at noon nor caring for restaurant grub. Other strange sights; we have hearsay ' Information that a woman who appeared to be in the seventies was seen pedaling along a Salem street, carrying a suitcase and smoking cigarette. As Jimy Wyatt would say, it's a queer world. Riding a bicycle carries you where you want to go, but watching the cyclists go by carries you back to the Gay Nineties and the first dec ade of this present century when there were cycling clubs withl hundreds of members who went on elaborately-planned Sunday trips. Or, If you've ever been there, it carries you back to Europe where foot-power locomotion is still pretty much the prevailing mode. In this country, cycling had become so un usual an activity except among the extremely young, that every time the galloping tintypes showed a romantic couple wheeling along as they often did, seeing that it's a highly photo genic exercise if done gracefully the incidental music always swung into the tuneful but inap propriate ditty about Daisy" the one whose chorus ends on the one line whose words most people remember, Kon a bicycle built for two." But speaking of the bicycle's; nostalgic asso ciations, in searching for someone's birth an nouncement in a 1900 file of The Statesman we ran across an article about "the winter care of your wheel" which ran to about a quarter of a page. What got us, though, was the arti cle's introduction which stated that what fol lowed wouldn't, be of much interest to those cyclists who bought "the new year's model" each spring. Who remembers that before the automobile came in, annual changes in de sign had been devised as a merchandising scheme by anyone except the manufacturers of women's apparel? Well, the bicycle has come back; as Harry Scott and Arthur Moore have been, predicting all these years. But as in other problems of substitution, such as that encountered in the field of fishermen's supplies substitutes were feund for the rare metals used in making rods, but there is none in sight for the silk used in making the linesthe bicycle proves not to be the complete answer to the personal transporta tion problem. There aren't enough bicycles, the demand can't be supplied, and they also require metals and rubber. So new bicycles for adults are "frozen" and presently they will be ration ed; and we trust that actual need will be the basis of allocation, not some rule-of-thumb formula. And as Harry Scott and Arthur Moore and lioyd Ramsden would have told you long ago If you had been willing to listen, the bicycle Is an economical and convenient means of trans portation; and healthful too. But about that "healthful business, it's true that there is exer cise in cycling and a lot of us need exercise. But there is danger that the health advantages will be suddenly canceled. A broken bone is an Item of poor health, brethren and sisters. . Trou ble is, the curtailment of automotive traffic is not complete. When 10-mph bicycles and 40 soph automobiles must use "the same streets and . highways, there is need for extra alertness to avoid accidents. And a bicycle affords not only scant privacy, but scant protection. Accident statistics already, mounting, illustrate this new need for highway caution on everybody's part. Power Push Renewed Except as it measures Senator Homer T. Bone's progress in recovery from the serious after-effects of a fall suffered many months ago in his Tacoma home, it is somewhat diffi cult to apprehend significance of his introduc tion at this time of a revised Columbia Power Authority bill. News dispatches suggest that the measure differs from Its several predecessors principally in that it provides for the issuance of revenue bonds to carry out the objectives of the plan previously devised. Just how this privilege would break any of the existing bot tlenecks to public power expansion in the north- ' west is rather obscure, but the solution of that puzzle can wait. - The real enigma at the moment concerns Senator Bone's insistence that the federal ac quisition of, privately-owned power facilities contemplated under the bill is "necessary for the most complete wartime use of the vast water power resources, and facilities of the northwest" By some process of reasoning which doubtless Involves recognition that due to federal de velopment of generating facilities, private ex pansion of generating capacity in the northwest " has been paralyzed. Senator Bone may be right about that Even so, his timing is terrible. For it was only a week age that Administrator Paul Raver of Bonneville announced his system was . snaking Interconnection with transmission fa- -cilities of Washington Water Power and Pacific Power & Liht companies to supply "excess m their storage t reservoirs and thus provide energy to the companies . . to conserve water maximum generating "capabilities for ' the region's peak load periodL" . It was explained that this interconnection would have advantages equivalent to installation of 100,000 kw. addi tional generating capacity. ; ' X This announcement marked a radical depar- 1 ture from the previous Bonneville policy, which had stood in the way of the proposed northwest power pool, though if falls considerably iShort of realizing that objective. It merely represents an ' admission that the pool is feasible and desira- ble; and in a practical sense related solely to ' the problem of supplying the wartime power needs, preferable in these times to the power . revolution which Raver and Senator, Bone have, been advocating. - ' J , " In Oregon if not in Washington, revival of , Tone's power empire scheme at this time would ; "No Tavor Sway Vs; No Fear Shall Awe From first Statesman, March 22, IMl , dlspetcbce credited to It or not otherwlee credited certainly insure controversy; And . these are times in which we ought to be fighting the axis, not among ourselves. In the most recent report by. the state board of health, Marion county physicians are credited with only 34 per cent "cooperation" in reporting communicable diseases. However , we are now enlightened on this matter which recently had us stumped. Marion county physicians do co operate almost unanimously to the fullest prac tical extent by reporting such cases when they encounter them. But for any weekv in which they ha ve no such cases, they do not file reports. Physicians, in some counties file reports every week, blank ones if they have no communicable disease cases, so their counties get credit for 100 per cent cooperation. Despite the probable desire of everyone to improve marksmanship these days, the shoot ing gallery operated on South Commercial street the last several months has been closed. In our opinion the proprietors passed up two bets. They didn't advertise. And they didn't have any tar gets that looked like Nips. Neivo Behind The News By PAUL MALLON (Distribution by King Feature Syndicate. Ine, Repro duction ta whole or Id put strictly prohibited.) WASHINGTON, April S Tbey said when France fell, the day of the fortress was dead, but Corregi dor and Malta are still standing against the most terrific air-bombing attacks the mechanical mind of man has been able to devise. The latest Japanese candidate for hari-kari in the Philippines, General Yamashita, stormed Cor regidor for days with everything he had in the air shortly after he took command. Thereafter he sent over only two or three bombers a day, indi i ',,-lv,l " ii nV I rocky formations permit build- ing of safe bomb shelters, beyond reach of the thousand-pounders. Large three inch anti-aircraft guns can erect Im penetrable walls of Jire in a defensive circle above the fort The bombers are thus forced so high, their chance of hitting their target is virtually nil, and most of their bombs are wasted. Unfortunately ships at sea and cities cannot maintain such defenses. Only the larger ships can carry 3 in. A-A's and their v aim is hindered by the motion of the vessels. Cities have their valuables above ground and are generally built on earth where bomb shelters 60 feet deep would be needed for such complete protection. Communiques have been speaking .tersely of night assaults by the Japs against Wainwright'a line in Bataan, hinting at a new wrinkle in war fare, stolen from the Russian book. There are new wrinkles but , not very well pressed. As the Japs use them, they are just glorified raids against outposts, organized more extensively than usual, so they can employ artil lery and mortars in the dark. In preparation for the night attack, aerial photo graphs are made of certain American positions, the guns are set and when darkness falls, they blaze away at the fixed invisible point. Generally this night artillery barrage prepares the way for infantry assault against machine gun nests, the locations of which are plotted out on paper in daylight Fortunately most of Bataan is a jungle so deep and dark it can hardly be penetrated in' daylight The Japs, therefore, have concentrated their xdght attacks generally on the Abucay plain, an open level space near the east end of Wainwright's line, where a stream falls into rice paddies. Wainwright does the same thing to the Japs, but only as far as his daytime vision permits plan ning; because he has no aerial reconnaissance. Fighting generally is three-fourths confusion, but at night it is nine-tenths melee. Results testify to its ineffectiveness so far. About the only thing really new that Yamashita . has done in the way of general strategy is to stop the sneak flank infiltration tactics of Hodubl The Japs won Malaya with these primarily and are., trying them now with great success in Burma. Homma tried them only once or twice and they led to his suicide Possibly Yamashita is putting them off until last The way MacArthur broke them up was to at tack, not the infiltraters but the lines in his front, something the British and Chinese have not tried . In Malaya or Burma. Now, however, Wainwright is better defended against infiltration. Every crevice and beach along his Bataan shores has been pre pared against flank sneaks to the fullest of our ability. CO. publication of afl in this newspaper. cating he had reached the same conclusion as his suiciding pre decessor. The British dot of Malta, south of Sicily, has been sub jected to the unbelievable total of more than 1,600 air attacks since the war began, without appreciable result (which may explain why the nazis have not fooled with Gibraltar.) . The explanation is clear. Anti-aircraft fire from a small prepared rocky fort apparently can make it impregnable. The Generally unnoticed is the official fact mat the nazl belt is getting tighter and tighter. Berlin radio has announced bread ration tor a normal person has been cut again from 2250 grams a week to 2000 grams and meat from 400 to 300 grams a hitch of one-ninth and one-fourth ; of the -belt again (workers get more, as they could not live on this approximately four-and-a-half pounds of bread and two-thirds ot a pound a meat a week. - A copy, of. the Volkischer Beobachter smuggled out. of Germany attributes this and other admitted belt-hitching to such Interesting matters as "medi ocre crops''; and the large increase in fighting forces in the last few months." The article by Her bert Backe says soldiers must.be better fed than civilians, The "mediocre crops'! are, of course, the result of the scorched earth policy in the Ukraine and non cooperation of conquered peoples. The "large in" crease in the fighting farces" is 'something that has ' not otherwise been advertised and apparently lore casts preparations for an elaborate spring drive, but it likewise confesses the troops will be raw. ...-V-' iXX. - ---. v -.. w. .: Star of India By R. J. HENDRICKS Pioneer life in 4-4-42 the Oregon Country as seen on Fourth Plain near Vancouver, Washington: W U (Concluding from yesterday:) "Sulphur was a highly recom mended remedy for sore throats and even for diphtheria. If the ' patient was able, he gargled with a solution of flowers of sulphur in a wineglass of water; if too weak to gargle, the attending housewife would blow some of the dry sulphur through a quill upon the inflamed parts ot his throat, or merely burn a chunk of sulphur upon a pan of live coals near the bed so that the patient might inhale some of the : fumes.' ' "Gunpowder, a commodity al ways at hand in the early Fourth Plain household, had its place in the family medicine chest As a cure for badly inflamed eyes, for instance, one might prepare a mixture of three tablespoonfuls of gunpowder in a cup of water, filter it to remove the insoluble particles, and put three or four drops at a time into the trou blesome eye. After the first 'smarting had passed, the treat ment apaprently gave relief. An other use for gunpowder water was in cases of thrash,' an in flammation about the mouth common to new babies. The gunpowder water ,was prepared in the same way as for sore eyes and was patted about the baby's mouth with a cloth dipped in the solution. There was a saying among the pio neers that everyone had thrash once, at birth or at death, and gunpowder water was the pre ferred treatment at whichever time. , "Dry gunpowder in equal parts with hog's lard was used as a salve in cases of frost bite, although the affliction was rare on Fourth Plain. More common during the winter were chil blains, treated by lighting a lit tle heap of gunpowder under the itching foot Whether the powder . cured the chilblains was a moot point the resulting burns were, generally so painful that one for- , got the first complaint "Serious bums from gunpow der were frequent, aside from those sustained in the chilblain cure. An effective treatment had to be at hand for their relief. One which not only drew the powder to the surface so that it The Safety Valve t Letters from Statesman - Readers l AS EASTEK DKEAM I had a dream the other night, Where all who breathed stood still;, . The Lord appeared in all His might, . And stood upon a bin. And He spoke. In words so calm . That everybody heard; And what He said is in a Psalm; It is in His written Word. - "O, my sons, why heed ye not Met ' ' ' - ' " But cruelly ye dp strife; On either hand where I can sc ' - Ye take each other's life! "I gave to ye a life of love. But look what ye have done. ' tnstead of heeding Him above. . Ye judge with the sword and gun!" D ELBERT BIBBY, US Veterans' Hospital, Portland, Ore. Ik. J - SaK sr." J- would not poison the wound, but which also kept the flesh so soft that there was little danger of a scar, was made with molasses and wheat flour in equal parts. It was made sufficiently thin that it could be spread on a piece of cotton and bound on as a poultice. Twice a day the poul tice was removed and the sur face of the wound gently bathed with a shaving brush and warm water. m "For minor burns the ordinary treatment was simply to mois ten the injured part, cover it completely with dry baking soda and wrap the whole in a wet .cloth, preferably linen. To, avoid the need of a bandage one might instead cover the surface with the white of an egg, which would harden and form an air tight protection in addition to its healing effects. Convenient treatment for burns sustained in the kitchen was merely to dash water over the burn and cover it with flour. Surphur and seal oil were sometimes used as an oitment for burns and were said to be almost proof against a scar. "Goose grease, rendered out and kept on a shelf for emergen cies, was used for sore throats, and hog's lard formed the base for many varieties of . salve Mixed in equal parts with dry sulphur, it made an ointment for boils and persistent sores; pounded with elderberry bark or red clover blossoms, it was used for burns; and for 'snuffles' in children, it was rubbed on the nose and on the soles of the feet V "A piece of salt pork, sprinkl ed with black pepper, might be tied around the neck for sore throat la scarlet fever a re commended practice was to rub the patient's whole body with a bacon rind and then tie the rind around his neck. "The number of remedies listed is not to be taken as evi dence mat Fourth Plainers were a delicate lot, but rather that their womenfolk knew what they were 'about Illness, how ever unexpected, offered a chal lenge to the pioneer housewife, and 'the foregoing may be re garded as proof that the chal lenge never went unanswered. - X.-; t "6. The Women's Part This, Got Carrier X V i copyrighted Chicago Dauy News ' dispatch by George Waller fressi , ' Asoerteaa navy base "some-1 where ta Autrslia" credited XL . ' Coma. Eiehard G. Vote (above) X Chicago with a torpedo bit . en a Japanese aircraft carrier after the submarine he saanded spotted the enemy ship silhewetted in the moonlight aa tt approached the Indian ecean. 3Lf A r ri - & then, was the way of living on Fourth Plain in the early days, with the woman's angle re garded perhaps overlong. But the woman's way of doing was vitally important to the Plain, since it was her housewifery, at its best often makeshift, which held the family together so that settlements might continue to thrive. From the woman's way of doing, too, might be deduced the whole pattern of life on the Plain, with all the housewifely tricks finding their counterpart in the labor of land-clearing and farming. "I have not attempted to find great significance in the every day life of the early Fourth Plainers,' but rather to describe some of their doings for pure pleasure; The Fourth Plainers didn't particularly seek signifi cance either. They feared God and got their crops, in on time, and were probably as content as anyone has a right to be." Eadio Firogirainnis KSIM 1 ATUS-DAT UH Kc Sao-IUM TT Shine TdO-News. 7 S Sunrise SaluU. $KX Musical Horoacay. 830 News Brevities. SS Sunset Trio. ao Pastor's CaiL S:19 Lud Gluskin. - t .30 Ruaa Morgan Orchestra. 10 World la Bevtew. 10:03 Some Like it Hot. 1030 Some Like it Sweet U AO Lew White. Organist 1130 -Pied Piper. 12 .DO -Iran Ditmara. 11:15 News. 1J 30 Hillbilly Serenade. 11:35 Willamette Valley. On iai a. U 55 Tune Tabloid. 1:19 Milady's Melody. 130 Fow Notes. 1 Isle of Paradise. SAO Sins Sons Time. S :1S Melody Mart. 130 Herb Jeffrey's Songm. S 5 Health Nurse.-Public 1:00 Old Opera House. 4:00 Shining Hour. 4:15 News. . 430 Tea time Tunes. 3:00 Here Comes the Band. 530 To the Ladies. 35 Dinner Hour Music S AO Tonight's Headlines. JS News Analysis. 30 Evening Serenade. 30 War Fronts on Review. 70 Interesting racts. . T3S Gleb Yellin. 730 Willamette Valley Opinions. T30 Surfe Riders. SAO News.' SdSi-The Roundup. ' S.-45 Silver Strings. t AO News. t:15 Edwards Oldtimers. 9M-This Is War. 10:13 Freddy Nagle. 1030 News. 1030 News. IS -45 Listen St Answer. It AO Week End Jamboree. lias-Last Minute News. . SLAUt MBS SATUUAT 1330 Km. TAO News. 7 OS Memory Timekeeper. S AO-News. ... . . 1:1 The Junior tfusieale. .-, 130 News. , ,.; .' a-US Army Band. AO Buyer's Parade. . -:15 Woman s Side e the' Hews. 30-This and That 10 AO News. MilS Jerry Sears II I si ills. ' 1039 Hello Again. 11 AO Journal fua'Acu. -1130 Concert Gems. . v 11:45 Luncheon Concert 1130 News. " - 11:45 University Music Hoar. V 1 AO Cab Calloway Orchestra. SAO Sunset Serenade. . -. 3 AO Anchors A weigh. 330 W - A. O CarrolL Australia. 4 AO News 4:15 Border PatroL -430 Confidcnttalhr Tours. ' 4.-4S Rythym. SAO Voices ta Song. 5:15 Tropical Serenade. S:4S Smfonietta. , 4:15 Pbil Stearns. ' ' - " . 430 Spotlight Bands. - 7 AO News and Views , 7:15 Movie Parade. , 730 Churchman's Saturday Night S AO-California Melodies. s :30 Wally Johnson Orchestra. . -' SAO News. US Serenade . 8:45 This Is War. 10 AO Skinnay Ennis Orchestra. 1030 News. . , 105 Rainbow Orchestra - ' ' 11 AO Louie Armstrong Orchestra. U 30 Bob Crosby Orchestra. Sunday Radio J On Pre U cnAFTUX ; We strode on through the twi- . V light, the air growing cooler, the loud beating of, the surf below the only sound 'until my com , panion spoke again. . W "You heard us talking last night at dinner about some peo ple being in Hidden Cove tot tage?' I nodded. She went on: . "Hidden Cove lies straight ahead of us about two miles, I should have known - who was 5 there , when my nephew spoke of see- . ing -smoke but we've had so much trouble with' tramps break ing m . they come from the - highway beyond Castaway. that It never occurred to me It might : be people who had a right to be mere. Ifs Pauline - .Dawson and her maid, Flora belle Hunt" Dawson that was the name mentioned ; by. the ; woman to -white. .. ,k , The one you saw was the 'Maid. Pauline Dawson calls her 'Miss,' but she's really : Mrsv " she's my brother's divorced wife. She took back her maiden name When they were divorced ten years ago, and we were glad to have her take It backvMy broth er settled a good sum of money on her, but she ran through it In the first year, and since that time" he's been supporting her, although she really has no legal claim on him." A thought flashed through my mindthose checks I had filed. Every month. In the big check book, there were . . sizable checks to P. G. Dawson. The picture was taking form. Miss Gregg went on.4 "Yester day while I was up at the stables, Miss Dawson and her maid arrived, got the key from my brother and took possession of the cottage, rm only sorry I didn't know it sooner and I ' could have saved others from bothering about it . But only a few weeks ago ' while Miss Baldwin was here, 1 think Miss lawson was .getting ready for a cruise In the South Seas. I helped pack her trunks myself and that's why I was sure she was gone" Relief swept over me like' the breeze from the Pacific that blew around us. "Tm so glad that there was no harm done by my letting Miss Hunt come in and get away again," I said. "I'd probably have thought to tell you tonight,'' Martha said, "but this morning, what with the hurry of helping Estelle and Sydney get ready to leave for the city and, with the vet com ing again to look at the colt it slipped my mind. So just for get it" I promised I would, and we turned, striding through the pur ple, windswept twilight, bade toward the ranch house where a few light twinkled now in the windows. Miss Gregg chuck led. "What Florabelle Hunt would want with a framed photograph of my brother is something I wouldn't know," she said. "She's tae respacttve stations. Aay varkm- Iksas aotes sy listeners are dae te entases bums my tae stauo She air as any time in the notice te cats newspaper. AO radle stations stay cat KCW-MBC SATORSAr-420 Ka. 4 AO Music. 5 30 War News. AO Sunrise Serenade. 7 AO News. f O Music la Vienna. 7:40 Martha Tilton. 7:44 Bern Hayes. aay Towers. Treubedor. :15 Organ. 30 America the rree. s S AO Music Room. 8:15 Consumer Time. 30 Oka Chase. 10:00 Lincoln Highway. 1030-Call to YouttTj 1045 News. " ' ll:00fitars ot Tomorrow. IS AO From New England te Too. 11.15 On the Home t-ront. 1130 Campus Capers -UAO-Newa. - 1 AO Down Mexico Way. 130 Afar Youth of 15 Tropical Park Races. SAO Doctors at Work. 130 Kicarde Time. 1:45 . Neiratune. - ,- 3 AO-Golden Melodies. . - S: News. , - 30 Rehglon ta the News. S.-4S Three Suns Trie. 4 AO Saturday Service Parts'. ' 430 Emma Otero. Singer. SAO Paul Carson. , J 5 Sports Scripts. 30 Ed Stoker. S.ao National Ban - Boaoa. ' I1??" sr5 Sports Newsreol. ' . 7:15 Charles Dent's Music 7:30 Grand OT Opry. AO Truth or OosuequesKsm, OAS- Beat of the Week. 30 Concert by 'rri S This Is War. UM News. - HAS Palace Hotel Orcheetra. 11 :l5-riorentine Gardens Orchestra. 1130 News. UA0-1 a. nv-Music. BCEX NBC SATT7KOAT UM Se. ' - SAO Musical dock. , 0-cahfornia Agrlealture. T:1S Breakfast diD :15 The Band Played OaV 30StelU Uner7 S:45 Stars of Today. :15 Troubador and the Lady.' "wwnai ram ana ho --HoteI Text Orchestra. liNewt ""V ilStory- U AO News. - Bovero Orchestra. 1 AO Club Matinee. SAO Penn Hotel Orchestra. 130 Savoy Ballroom Orchestra. SAO Arcadia BltoN S 38 -News. 3 30 Jean CavaO. " ' 15 F-d ward Tomllnsoa. 4A0-Bdly Moore Trio. 4:15 Blackhaw Valley Boy. 430-Meaure ot IsrJeL Hotel Sir Francis Drake Orch. S 30 Swap Night !:22"-MIodie brDeMeUo. , S M Rochester Clvie Orcbestm. " 7 AO-Tune Out Time. T 30 Red Ryder. , SAo Believe It or Not ' S 30 Green Hornet - : SAO News. SA5 Palace Bote- Orchestra. t:15 News Comments. , S30 News. :4S This Is War. ??:T?t1sir "rsnc1s Drake Orch. ii0 ihe Qoiet bour. ... lain poison to him. I get along Hth her all right but I get along with most people." She would, I reflected. With her steady solid determination, her force, so like her brother's, ' Martha' Gregg was a character able, to stand between him i and intruders, to smooth the 'way for both bis wife and his di vorced wife, to handle the man agement of this highly complex l: IwuseholdU My admiration for Martha was increasing steadily. - "I have a hunch that you're Just the secretary, my. brother has been looking for. Miss Lane," she went on as we strode down the slope "of the garden. -If you are staying here youTl be meeting the women from the cove U if they stay, and nobody can tell about that v so ! Til bore you with a bit more 'fam ily history. You'd never think it now, but when my brother mar tied her, Pauline Dawson was the prettiest' gui in Gallina. Howevr, since that time she's let herself be carried away with all kinds of cults . and - causes. -One year she's a vegetarian and . shudders at the thought of a beefsteak. Next year she's a mystic and wears white robes' and studies with - yogis and swamis and what-have-you. Mrs. Gregg Estelle doesnt like having Miss Dawson around and I cant say that I blame her much." . ' , Odd how. that brief but point ed conversation over the tele phone Iwith a girl I had never met would keep coming back to me from time to time since I came to Castaway; "There's one woman who comes to the ranch Ithat's goofy as a hoot owl," she had said, , and Miss Dawson had been there, accord ing to Martha, while Miss Bald-, win was playing her short role as secretary. All that she had told me, so far, checked up with the facts as I found them. Would her fears arid forebodings prove to be equally sound? I wonder- i ed as we crossed the patio and entered the lighted, cheerful living room. Lance, the nephew, didnt come to dinner, but Harry Cra ven, the assistant, did. And his coming! added to the entries in the little blue book that' was my diary. One short, significant note was sounded that night at dinner. And if I had heeded its warning Just as if I had realized: the importance of that stolen photograph and had gone to Walter Gregg with my suspicious, perhaps he : might have averted the whole long train of; evil that lay before us. I listened to Harry Craven but I listened without under standing that what he was say ing was a warning of the tra gedy to come. ' But I did not know. I did not act I did not speak. And who can tell? Perhaps if I had acted it might have made no differ ence in the - course of events at "Castaway. ; (To be continued) Mevtag WorM. lias Organ. 11 39 War News Roundup. KOH CBS SATCXBAT 7 Ko. AO Northwest tana Reporter. :1S Breakfast BuUetinT 30 Koin BOocft. 7U5 Headliners. , 130 Bob Carred Reporting. TS-Phil Hanna SongsT AO Jane Eadicott. :15 Consumer News. 30-Lers Pretend AO Theatre of Today. - - 30 Kid Critics. :4S Let's Waltz. 10 AO Serenade. - 10 30 Adventures la finpa. MAS Of Men and te. " UpKOmb 0f Chape f iitrSEiS 7- Hews. i .rryUw1nWa i:?J5ewP,Pr the Air. f Skp.;- S3lZew? !iltr?2? 2&' News. . r 5S Joha Daly, NewsT ' 30 Leon Drews. ??iZSSI,TtaL.NIB Serei iJw57 AOHit ParMe. " - slito Harmonica. ---Fi4 Star riiat l:lft World TodayT li2irfedf;,ukl, Orchestra. " lO 5 Defense Todar illNwaf reatr- KOACATTJRnAT-lS Km. sssar JfiJfccHotaf ll:00-Newe. b Hour. - ' ' :?''?avo1te Oaaaica. " ii-9jrgan Moods. Camera Cluoa. . 130 In Defense of 1A4 mItS-. Anertea. "ilJ22,rooi ,h Hula. wt S-oo r-V!f.-Pys ghia. :30-arm. Hour. - ' t Old-Fashioaed Revival Chrll K. Patter, Rector tiospel Preach ' 5:C9 P. It j CuiaoM Interna--